“You won’t need them here,” she said.
She went to the girls’ closet. Pulled down jackets, backpacks, tossed them on top.
I grabbed the bag. “You can’t do this.”
She yanked it away. “Watch me.”
It was like being punched.
“Derek!” I called. “Tell her to stop.”
He appeared in the doorway, phone still in hand.
He looked at the bags. At Patricia. At me.
“Why?” he said. “You’re leaving.”
Mason appeared behind him, eyes huge. “Mom? Why is Grandma taking our stuff?”
“Go wait in the living room, baby,” I said. “It’s okay.”
It wasn’t.
Patricia dragged the bags to the front door and flung it open.
“Girls!” she called. “Come tell Mommy goodbye! She’s going back to her parents!”
Lily sobbed. Harper clung to my leg. Mason stood stiff, jaw tight.
I grabbed Derek’s arm. “Please. Look at them. Don’t do this.”
He leaned in close. “You should’ve thought about that before you kept failing.”
Then he folded his arms like a judge watching a sentence carried out.

Patricia slammed the door. Derek didn’t come out.
I called my mom with shaking hands. “Can we come stay with you? Please.”
